Latest market data

Stock search

A view of the interior of the 57,000-square-foot mansion owned by late TV producer Aaron Spelling and his wife Candy in the Holmby Hills neighborhood of Los Angeles. The luxury end of the U.S. real estate market is going gangbusters. The rest of the market? Not so good.

NEW YORK — In America, it's starting to feel as if there are two housing markets. One for the rich — and international buyers — and one for everyone else.

Consider foreclosure-ravaged Detroit. In the historic Green Acres district, a haven for hipsters, a pristine, three-bedroom brick Tudor recently sold for $6,000 — about what a buyer would have paid during the Great Depression.

Yet just 15 miles away, in the posh suburban enclave of Birmingham, bidding wars are back. Multimillion-dollar mansions are selling quickly. Sales this August were up 21 percent from the previous year. The country club has ended its stealth discounts on new memberships. And Main Street's retail storefronts are full.

"We're getting more showings, more offers and more sales," says Ronnie Keating, a real estate agent with Sotheby's International.

Think of this housing market as bipolar. In the luxury sector, the recession is a memory and sales and prices are rising. But everywhere else, the market is moving sideways or getting worse.

In the housing market inhabited by most Americans, prices have fallen 30 percent or more since the peak in 2007. That's a steeper decline than during the Depression. Some people have had their homes on the market for a year without a single offer.

Almost a quarter of American homeowners owe more on their house than it's worth. Another quarter have less than 20 percent equity. About half of homeowners couldn't get a mortgage if they applied today, says Paul Dales, senior U.S. economist for Capital Economics.

But then there is the other housing market, occupied by 1.5 percent of the U.S. population, according to Zillow.com. The one with outdoor kitchens and in-home spas; with his-and-her boudoirs and closets the size of starter houses. The one that is not local but global, with international buyers bidding in all cash. And where the gyrations of the stock market are cause for conversation, not cutting expenses.

In this land of luxury properties, the Great Recession seems over. Prices of $1 million-plus properties have risen 0.7 percent since February, according to Zillow. Prices of houses under $1 million have fallen more than 1.5 percent.

Normally, these two segments of the housing market rise and fall together. But now, they're moving in opposite directions.

"Luxury is the best performing segment of the housing market right now," says Zillow.com chief economist Stan Humphries.

After every recession since World War II, housing has led the economic recovery. Not this time. The renewed vitality in the comparatively small market for luxury homes is not enough to power a full-blown recovery. This bifurcation in the market is yet another reason Michelle Meyer, the chief economist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, says her housing outlook is "increasingly downbeat."

Split everywhere
The phenomenon is not limited to real estate. You can see the same split in other gauges of the economy. Sales at Saks versus Walmart. Pay on Wall Street versus Main Street. Corporate profits versus family balance sheets.

The divide is also making credit a perk of the rich. Mortgage rates are the lowest in decades. But what good are absurdly cheap rates if you can't get a mortgage? The banks aren't granting credit to anyone "who even has a smudge on their application," says Jonathan Miller, founder of real estate consulting firm Miller Samuel. Applications for new mortgages languish at 10-year lows.

Across the U.S., prices on high-end homes fell after the subprime crash in the fall of 2008. The price on the $25 million mansion became $20 million, then $15 million. Such "bargains" are pushing more luxury buyers to commit to more deals.

There are other factors, too. In Detroit, a recovering auto industry is helping propel high-end sales. All those car executives who have helped turnaround the American auto industry used to rent. Now they are using their performance bonuses to buy homes.

Wall Street's recovery has brought back the market for mansions in the Hamptons, on Long Island, where the number of closings has returned to the 2007 level, and for luxury co-ops in New York City. And because of social-network riches in Silicon Valley, twice as many homes have sold for $5 million or more this year than last.

But in the other housing market, an apartment tower built in 2007 in San Jose, California, recently converted to all-rental. The building had not sold a single unit. In Miami, a city that exemplifies the foreclosure epidemic, idled cranes dot the skyline. Unemployment shot up again this summer from 12 percent to 14 percent, a level not seen since the energy crisis in 1973. There are so many two-bedroom condos in gated communities with golf courses, private pools and rustic jogging paths that you can pick one up for $25,000, 66 percent off the price five years ago. But luxury condos priced at $1 million or more are selling as rapidly as they did during the boom.

"In the 20 years that I have been in South Florida real estate, I have never seen a greater divide between those who have and those who have not," says Peter Zalewski, founder of the real estate firm Condo Vultures.

Foreign money
One big factor in the divide is foreign cash, at least in the world of property. For international buyers, U.S. real estate is the new undervalued asset, the new fire sale, and foreigners are big buyers of luxury properties. International clients bought $82 billion worth of U.S. residential real estate last year, up from $66 billion in 2009. In states like Florida, international buyers account for a third of purchases, up from 10 percent in 2007.

"Luxury properties are drawing buyers from all over the world," says CoreLogic's chief economist, Mark Fleming.

That's true even in such seemingly all-American enclaves as Detroit. Step off a plane at the city's futuristic new airport and the internationalization of the Motor City is obvious. All the signs — as well as the announcements on the public address system — are in both Chinese and English.

In the middle of the terminal sits a five-star Westin Hotel, the better to serve the global executive class that jets in and out as the U.S. auto industry regains its footing. Many of them are buying in Birmingham, where home values are up 3.1 percent this year, according to Zillow.com.

In Birmingham, local store owners say business is as good as it was during the boom years last decade. Chasta Fase, who owns Old World Olive Press, a boutique shop that sells $30 bottles of olive oil from all around the world says business "has been just awesome" since she opened her doors in November. And since April, she says, customers have been spending more than ever.

Real estate agent Keating says the same is happening to her sales. In June, she sold a lakefront mansion in Birmingham to a Russian entrepreneur. He had purchased a local steel company that he plans to turn around.

"They're coming from all over," says Keating, who for the past 30 years has sold most of the car barons their homes, from Roger Smith, the former CEO of General Motors, to former Chrysler CEO Bob Nardelli. "I don't know who any of them are anymore."

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Video: Inside billionaire's high-tech castle

Closed captioning of: Inside billionaire's high-tech castle

>>>back now at 7:48 with an inside look at the mega mansion being built in the
ozarks
. the 72,000
square foot
home is a source of many rumors, are
hollywood stars
moving in? could it be a buncher for
homeland security
? kevin tibbles in highland,
missouri
with answers. do you have some answers? good morning.

>> reporter: could you just imagine the rumors, people wondering what are they doing way up there on the hill? this is what they've been doing, building pensmore, modder day state-of-the-art disaster-proof castle. rising from an isolated hilltop high in the
ozarks
, a massive concrete mansion unlike any other. soon to be one of the four largest homes in america. its name is pansmo pensmore.

>>loosely derived from the french.

>> reporter: it's probably more thinking put in the construction of this palatial estate. from successfulent tree muir stephen huff who designed it to be state-of-the-art. how much concrete will be poured here?

>>several thousand yards of concrete.

>> reporter: pensmore will be one of the largest disaster-resistant homes in the country, not far from joplin,
missouri
, devastated by a tornado this past spring. pensmore is made from an innovative concrete additive with millions of tiny pieces of wire mixed in, reinforcing it against anything from an f-5 tornado to a bomb blast.

>>it makes the concrete much stronger.

>> reporter: so i guess you're thinking heating and cooling a house this immense would probably bankrupt you. i know it would me, except pensmore is so energy-efficient, they're not planning on spending a dime. plastic tubes snaking through the insulated concrete walls will carry a liquid antifreeze of sorts all powered by
solar energy
either to cool or heat the enormous house. at 72,000
square feet
, pensmore is bigger than the
white house
, bigger than the
hurst castle
and just shy of
buckingham palace
and all made of concrete. when people think concrete, they think --

>>they think ugly.

>> reporter: but this won't look like a bunker. the exterior, when finished will resemble a french chateau and huff's daughter susan is in charge of decorating the interior, all 13 bedrooms and 14 bathrooms.

>>we're down to earth, not swanky people, we just want a traditional look on the inside.

>> reporter: pensmore is so big, so inventive, so cutting edge that people started speculating about just what was going on up there on the hill.

>>first we heard was the
movie star
theory. after that, it escalated to aliens,
extra terrestrials
.
into the great wide open

>> reporter: actually,
brad pitt
does hail from nearby springfield,
missouri
, but no, he and angelina and the kids won't be moving in, neither will e.t. and his alien buddies but there will be a
little girl
running around, huff's 6-year-old granddaughter, lucille. do you think your grandpa will let you have a playroom?

>>yes.

>> reporter: does he always say yes whenever you ask him for stuff? our house

>> reporter: and pensmore, playroom and all, is on schedule to be completed by late
2013
. is there anything you forgot?

>>if i knew that, i would nn't have forgotten it.

>> reporter: stephen huff became so enamored with the new company he bought it and hopes in the future they'll build nor energy-efficient and safer schools, hospitals, someday maybe even homes. i'm now standing in the great hall, and i've got it tell you guys i've already got my dibs on this, know exactly what sort of kiss posters and stuff i'm going to put on the wall, the view of the
ozarks
.